Instructional Video11:08
The Learning Depot

How Authors Describe Characters: Direct vs Indirect Characterization

12th - Higher Ed
When taking a reading comprehension test, have you ever been stumped by a question asking about how the author or another character feels about a specific character? Or perhaps when reading a novel or story, you’re somewhat confused...
Instructional Video3:14
Curated Video

Types of Characterization

K - 8th
“Types of Characterization” will help the student to review the different types of characterization, particularly direct and indirect characterization
Instructional Video1:56
Curated Video

Characterization

9th - Higher Ed
This video is about how writers use characterization to show what a character is like.
Instructional Video4:14
Curated Video

Characterizing Autism

12th - Higher Ed
UCL development psychologist Uta Frith relates her view on what the essence of autism is, describing how the critical feature of autism is a lack of an innate ability to “mentalize” or attribute an inner life to others.
Instructional Video4:27
NASA

NASA | The Changing Chesapeake

3rd - 11th
The Chesapeake Bay receives water from the 64,000 square miles of land surrounding the bay and Landsat satellites are a critical and invaluable tool for characterizing the landscape and mapping it over time. Landsat data provides a...
Instructional Video1:02
Curated Video

Macbeth 1.5 Language: "mortal thoughts"

6th - Higher Ed
This video examines Lady Macbeth's invocation of evil spirits to influence her thoughts towards murder and her desire to be "unsexed," shedding her feminine traits for ruthless masculinity. It prompts reflection on gender roles and the...
Instructional Video4:09
Curated Video

City, Country, or Somewhere in Between?

3rd - 8th
Dr. Forrester talks about categorizing areas by their populations. Cities have a denser population of people and are characterized by taller buildings.
Instructional Video1:37
Curated Video

Rare White Waterbuck Calf Born at San Diego Zoo

6th - Higher Ed
Not to be confused with albinism, leucism is a condition characterized by reduced pigmentation. So, this cute little guy is white where he should be brown, and brown where he should be white.
Instructional Video1:37
Curated Video

What Exactly is a Waterbuck? These Zookeepers Explain!

6th - Higher Ed
Not to be confused with albinism, leucism is a condition characterized by reduced pigmentation. So, this cute little guy is white where he should be brown, and brown where he should be white.
Instructional Video1:37
Curated Video

Just How Rare Is This White Waterbuck Calf? Watch and Find Out!

6th - Higher Ed
Not to be confused with albinism, leucism is a condition characterized by reduced pigmentation. So, this cute little guy is white where he should be brown, and brown where he should be white.
Instructional Video4:39
Curated Video

Protagonist and Antagonist

K - 8th
Protagonist and Antagonist explores the concept of characterization by defining the terms protagonist and antagonist and providing examples.
Instructional Video3:52
Curated Video

Character Traits

3rd - Higher Ed
Character Traits explores the concept of characterization by explaining various character traits, including physical, emotional, and behavioral.
Instructional Video1:22
Curated Video

Character Impact

9th - Higher Ed
This video introduces the topic of characterization.
Instructional Video12:55
Crash Course

World War II Part 1 Crash Course US History

12th - Higher Ed


In which John Green teaches you about World War II, a subject so big, it takes up two episodes. This week, John will teach you how the United States got into the war, and just how involved America was before Congress actually...
Instructional Video5:14
TED Talks

Leila Pirhaji: The medical potential of AI and metabolites

12th - Higher Ed
Many diseases are driven by metabolites -- small molecules in your body like fat, glucose and cholesterol -- but we don't know exactly what they are or how they work. Biotech entrepreneur and TED Fellow Leila Pirhaji shares her plan to...
Instructional Video4:34
MinuteEarth

The Fruit You Can Never Ripen

12th - Higher Ed
Thank you to HelloFresh for sponsoring this video! Use code EARTH14 for up to 14 FREE MEALS across your first 5 HelloFresh boxes plus free shipping at href='https://bit.ly/3vvSdyo' target='_blank' rel='nofollow'>at Trying to ripen...
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

What Makes Soft Things Soft?

12th - Higher Ed
You're minding your own business, looking at blankets, when suddenly you feel something heavenly. Now you are petting an inanimate object and thinking about naming it and bringing it home. Why do some fabrics feel so soft?! Skillshare is...
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

Why "Nothing" Matters in Science

12th - Higher Ed
Null results often get a bad rap, sometimes characterized as a study "finding nothing," but there's a lot we can learn from studies whose results fail to support their hypotheses.
Instructional Video0:55
SciShow

SciShow Outtakes Remix

12th - Higher Ed
An outtake remix of the latest and greatest word fails from the hosts of SciShow and SciShow Space, and The Hubble Flow: a dance move characterized by wobbling away from everyone else on the dance floor.
Instructional Video6:43
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Patterns - Level 3 - Similarities and Differences

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on similarities and differences.

T
ERMS:
Patterns - regularity in
the world
Simil
arities - alike
Di
fference - not alike
Sort - arrange...
Instructional Video16:18
TED Talks

Emma Teeling: The secret of the bat genome

12th - Higher Ed
In Western society, bats are often characterized as creepy, even evil. Zoologist Emma Teeling encourages us to rethink common attitudes toward bats, whose unique and fascinating biology gives us insight into our own genetic makeup.
Instructional Video16:59
Bozeman Science

Unit 2 Review - Speciation

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen reviews the major concepts within the second unit of the new AP Biology framework. He starts by describing how life is organized into three domains. He explains how the history of life on the planet is...
Instructional Video6:52
SciShow

The Ice Bucket Challenge Actually Worked

12th - Higher Ed
The Ice Bucket Challenge raised millions of dollars for research into treatments for ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. Where did that money go? Into characterizing new genes that we may be able to target with chemotherapy drugs like...
Instructional Video7:16
The Cynical Historian

300 | Based on a True Story

9th - 11th
Here is another episode of 'Based on a True Story.' This time it is 300 and how it is based on the battle of Thermopylae. It is a great film with a great many historically innacurate plot points....

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